14 research outputs found
End of life care in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review of the qualitative literature
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>End of life (EoL) care in sub-Saharan Africa still lacks the sound evidence-base needed for the development of effective, appropriate service provision. It is essential to make evidence from all types of research available alongside clinical and health service data, to ensure that EoL care is ethical and culturally appropriate. This article aims to synthesize qualitative research on EoL care in sub-Saharan Africa to inform policy, practice and further research. It seeks to identify areas of existing research; describe findings specifically relevant to the African context; and, identify areas lacking evidence.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Relevant literature was identified through eight electronic databases: AMED, British Nursing Index & Archive, CINAHL, EMBASE, IBSS, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and the Social Sciences Citation Index; and hand searches. Inclusion criteria were: published qualitative or mixed-method studies in sub-Saharan Africa, about EoL care. Study quality was assessed using a standard grading scale. Relevant data including findings and practice recommendations were extracted and compared in tabular format.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Of the 407 articles initially identified, 51 were included in the qualitative synthesis. Nineteen came from South Africa and the majority (38) focused on HIV/AIDS. Nine dealt with multiple or unspecified conditions and four were about cancer. Study respondents included health professionals, informal carers, patients, community members and bereaved relatives. Informal carers were typically women, the elderly and children, providing total care in the home, and lacking support from professionals or the extended family. Twenty studies focused on home-based care, describing how programmes function in practice and what is needed to make them effective. Patients and carers were reported to prefer institutional care but this needs to be understood in context. Studies focusing on culture discussed good and bad death, culture-specific approaches to symptoms and illness, and the bereavement process.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The data support or complement the findings from quantitative research. The review prompts a reconsideration of the assumption that in Africa the extended family care for the sick, and that people prefer home-based care. The review identifies areas relevant for a research agenda on socio-cultural issues at the EoL in sub-Saharan Africa.</p
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Paper presented at the 1st Africa Conference of Young Staticians, Pretoria, 1-3 Jul
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The involvement of women in sustainable development policy and programmes in South Africa
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Child and mother indicators of progress towards the MDG: a four country comparison
Paper presented at the 4th Population Association of Southern Africa Conference 2009, 8 Jul
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Exploring teenage pregnancy in South Africa: a human rights approach
Paper presented at the HSRC Social Science Conference, Johannesburg, Septembe
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Rural women, HIV and human rights abuses in South Africa: a critical review
A theme that reflects rural women's experiences is appropriately captured in an Amnesty International (AI) report titled "I am at
the lowest end of all": Rural women living with HIV face human rights abuses in South Africa (2008). The study reported in the
publication, undertaken in two provinces, namely Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal, examines patterns of human rights abuses
of women who are exposed to the risk of or are already living with HIV in rural contexts with the twin challenges of widespread
poverty and unemployment. Drawing on the testimonies of 37 women, the study explicates experiences of intimate partner/
stranger violence by women facing intermittent periods of economic instability and hunger in the context of poverty, stigma and
low social status. This study highlights systemic factors which affect women's ability to realise their right to health. Its value is
that it prioritises an under-researched and often excluded community (namely rural women), demonstrating a theoretical and
empirical flaw often captured in the critical literature, which resists the romanticisation of rural life. This review article critically
evaluates this report, both in its conceptual and empirical engagement with contemporary theories and case studies of gender
and rurality. Issues related to rurality, power, difference, HIV and AIDS and human rights are analysed to suggest strengths and
weaknesses in the report, and the relevance of its findings for ongoing research, activism and policy change in South Africa.
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The view from below: citizen voice and regulation in water services: final report: executive summary
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Military mutilation: the aversion program in the South African Defence Force in the apartheid era
This chapter profiles the aversion program as a secret SADF project that was administered to "treat "the homosexuals. The authors argue that the program contributed to positioning the homosexuals as a particular political subject a subject that is deviant and consequently needs to be constrained. The authors also argue that the emergence of the homosexual through this structure of oppression engendered a discourse in which the homosexual became a productive subject, one who not only accounts for the experience of violence, but also actively transforms the discourse to challenge the oppressive, militarized political order of the apartheid state. Through the public process of healing that the TRC from 1996-1998, the homosexual subject has contributed in an important way to the construction of post-apartheid national identity.
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Lame flamingoes, flying ducks: exploring what South Africa's state of the future index could contribute to her policy discourse
Paper presented at the First ISA Forum of Sociology: Sociological Research and Public Debate, Barcelona, Spain, 5-8 Septembe
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Future of South Africa state of the future index SA-SOFI
Paper presented at a Reference Panel Meeting, 8 Apri